Purchasing Procedures
Purchasing Procedures
By learning and implementing a few best practices for your purchasing process,
- you can help reduce waste,
- protect your business from needless risk and expense,
- develop workflows that maximize efficiency, profits, and value recovered from every dollar invested.
The primary benefit of a formal process for purchasing is avoiding waste due to fraud, rogue spend, theft, and
other financial pitfalls that accompany undocumented, non-optimized buying habits. But because procurement
sits at the heart of the value creation process for your company, formalizing and optimizing your purchasing
process is also important to:
- Creating and efficient and effective buying process for not just direct spend (e.g., raw materials) but
indirect spend (e.g., office supplies, IT services, etc.).
- Successful supplier relationship management.
- Optimal supply chain management and strategic sourcing (for both cost savings and value)
- Streamlining the procurement cycle and all its sub-processes.
- Providing a solid audit trail for internal and external review.
- Establishing a model for business process management that can be applied across your entire organization.
Traditionally, the purchasing process is a cycle, with each step requiring the exchange of information and
various approvals to move forward. Every business will have its own unique touches to add, but generally
speaking, the purchasing process follows a well-established pattern of events.
1. Needs Analysis
At this stage, the company recognizes and documents a need for goods or services to solve a particular problem.
The procurement team describes the need to be met, and works with others to determine how best to do so. For
example, a company facing high travel expenses might invest in more fuel-efficient company transportation for
its sales staff, or reduce the amount of travel required for remote employees by investing in advanced
telecommunication software.
Purchase requests below established budget thresholds are automatically updated to purchase orders, and
submitted to the preferred supplier for that item or service. More expensive purchases, or unexpected purchases
not in the budget, will be forwarded to the appropriate individuals for review and approval before they can be
transferred to POs.
Potential suppliers submit their bids, and are carefully reviewed based on their performance history, compliance
records, and important characteristics such as average lead times, reputation, and price.
Once the contract is signed, the purchase order is a legally binding agreement between buyer and seller.
7. Three-Way Matching
A cornerstone of spend management, three-way-matching is the comparison of shipping documents/packing
slips with the original purchase order and the invoice issued by the supplier. This comparison is used to ensure
all the information related to the transaction is accurate.
Discrepancies must be rectified as soon as possible to avoid additional charges, delays in production and
payment, or damage to supplier relationships.
• Delivery note-it is like an invoice but is send when goods are being delivered to the
customer. It contains names of the buyer and supplier, date, quantity of product, price and
terms
• Credit Note-shows the amount of money that is supposed to be returned to the customer for
damaged goods
• Statement of account-it is used to show the customer the amount of money that he is due to
pay. It is send by the seller.
• Receipts for cash payments-it is a document sent to confirm that money or cash has been
received
• Pay-in slip-show the amount of money that has been deposited in the bank or has been paid
• Purchase orders (POs) are documents sent from you, as the buyer, to a supplier with a
request for products or services as an order. Each PO will include a number for tracking the
purchase order throughout the system, as well as the type of item, quantity, and agreed
upon price. More specific orders will include more details, but as a general rule, the more
information you include, the more effective your PO is.